US troops withdrawing to Iraq from Syria can't redeploy there and have to leave in 4 weeks, Baghdad says

The 1,000 U.S. troops leaving Syria will be allowed to stay in Iraq for at most four weeks, Iraq's defense minister said Wednesday, in an embarrassing rebuff to President Donald Trump's plans for withdrawing from Syria.

Najah al-Shammari's comments to the Associated Press came shortly after his meeting with U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper, who went to Baghdad to negotiate the redeployment of U.S. troops in Iraq after they withdrew from Syria.

The emergency meeting came after Esper announced on Monday that the American troops would be stationed along the Iraq-Syria border.

Al-Shammari said Wednesday that he and Esper agreed that American troops leaving Syria would simply be "transiting" through Iraq before moving on to Kuwait, Qatar, or home to the U.S., the AP reported.

Al-Shammari added that this transition would take place "within a time frame not exceeding four weeks," as cited by the AP.

It was not clear where the troops would be deployed next. The Defense Department has not yet responded to Business Insider's request for confirmation on Esper and al-Shammari's discussions.

Trump has said that one of his reasons to withdraw from northeastern Syria is to end "forever wars" in the Middle East, and bring troops home. Deploying them to Iraq would not have fulfilled this pledge.

A U.S. military convoy leaving Syria near the town of Tel Tamr on Sunday(Associated Press photo)

Earlier on Wednesday Esper said that the U.S. has no plans to leave troops in Iraq "interminably," the AP reported. He has also met with the country's prime minister, Adel Abdul Mahdi.

The U.S. currently has more than 5,000 troops in Iraq, but has attempted to kept the numbers low due to political sensitivities after the U.S. occupation during the 2003 war, the AP reported.